New Minnesota laws go into effect on Monday

By
Lydia Coutre
Star Tribune

June 30, 2013 — 7:22am

Video (00:45) : The price of cigarettes in Minnesota will increase by $1.60 a pack. New state laws are scheduled to take effect beginning Monday, including a $2.1 billion tax increase that will raise the cost of cigarettes.

Craig Gebhardt, who smokes two packs of cigarettes a day, will have to start handing over an extra $3.20 daily starting Monday. That’s when a raft of new state laws take effect, including a $2.1 billion tax increase that will raise the cost of cigarettes and impose the first significant income tax increase on the state’s wealthy in decades.

“I either quit or spend more money,” Gebhardt said matter-of-factly. Unwilling to give up his cigarettes, Gebhardt said he’ll just have to “work a little harder to afford them.”

The new revenue will go toward balancing the state’s budget, repaying K-12 schools and helping fuel an array of new spending that ranges from roads and light-rail construction to a college tuition freeze and property tax relief.

Consumers will feel a little pinch too. The state sales tax is being extended to digital items including downloaded ringtones, music and videos and online gaming. One break: Digital textbooks will have the same exemption given to traditional textbooks.

The new fourth-tier income tax rate of 9.85 percent will be levied on adjusted gross income above $250,000 for married couples and $150,000 for single filers.

Jobs, Energy, Housing

Jim Mone, Associated Press

In this Feb. 7, 2013 file photo, cigarette butts fill the ash tray at the State Capitol complex in St. Paul, Minn. The 2013 Legislature passed a new cigarette tax of $1.60 a pack which is intended to help fund the state's $348 million share of the $975 million Minnesota Vikings NFL football stadium.

Some of the money raised will go to create new job opportunities and improve housing. Funds are being set aside for job training a new office to market state goods overseas and a tax cut for business. Other laws include:

• Tax breaks and financial incentives for television and film producers who do location shoots in Minnesota.

• $10 million for housing in areas with low-vacancy rates.

• A new solar energy requirement for Minnesota’s largest utilities that mandates 1.5 percent of their energy come from solar sources by 2020 and a non-mandatory goal of 10 percent by 2030.

Health

• Employers with at least 50 workers must include autism disorder treatment and the state will pay to provide the same benefit to children on Medical Assistance.

• Nursing homes will get a 5 percent funding increase, giving employees their first raise in four years.

• The state health department will hire a director of child sex trafficking prevention, who will coordinate efforts to treat underage prostitutes as victims rather than criminal offenders.

• The cigarette tax will rise to $2.83, an increase of $1.60 a pack, giving Minnesota the sixth-highest cigarette tax in the country. “Little cigars” and moist snuff products also will be taxed at the new rate. Part of the revenue from the first year’s increase will help fund the new Minnesota Vikings football stadium.

The cigarette changes are driving Tara Kolden, 34, to make this the last weekend for her and her fiancé to smoke. “We’re getting married next summer, and I’d rather spend the money getting my wedding planned out than buying cigarettes,” she said.

Health advocates say that’s just the effect they’re hoping the higher tax will provoke. “Oftentimes it comes down to ‘I can’t afford this anymore,’” said Mike Sheldon, of ClearWay Minnesota, an anti-tobacco nonprofit.

Education

• Free, all-day kindergarten will be made available in school districts that want it, ending the practice in some cash-strapped districts of charging parents for full-day kindergarten. In addition, the state will provide a number of early learning scholarships to the low-income families of 3- and 4-year-olds.

• Instead of being able to bail out of high school at age 16, students will be legally bound to attend until age 17, unless they’ve already graduated.

• State graduation exams are no more. Students instead will take a new set of reading, writing and math tests that don’t require a minimum score to graduate.

• College students get a two-year reprieve on ever-­rising tuitions if they are undergraduates at the University of Minnesota or the Minnesota State Colleges and University ­System. For the first time, resident tuition rates will be offered to some undocumented immigrants who meet other Minnesota residency requirements.

Ben Burdorf, a sophomore studying microbiology and neuroscience, said the freeze will definitely save him money. “I don’t think anyone’s unhappy about it,” he said.

Projects

Approximately $496 million will fund dozens of arts, parks, trails and natural resource projects, including the Como Park Zoo, Minnesota Public Radio, the Minnesota Zoo and the Pollution Control Agency, as well as grants to small movie theaters to help them transition from film to digital projection systems.

In addition, new laws will increase appropriations to local governments, help Minneapolis pay off its new library and help fund expansion projects at the Mayo Clinic, 3M and the Mall of America.

Poor seamanship and flaws in keeping watch contributed to a collision between a Navy destroyer and a commercial container ship that killed seven sailors, Navy officials said, announcing that the warship captain will be relieved of command and more than a dozen other sailors will be punished.

Gunnar Birkerts, an internationally acclaimed modernist architect who designed buildings including the Federal Reserve Bank in Minneapolis, the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, New York, and the University of Michigan Law Library, has died. He was 92.